What happens when school-based audiologists and speech-language pathologists have students with hearing loss in the same grade with roughly similar backgrounds-who are on wholly opposite academic journeys? One may be on her way to a successful scholastic future post-graduation, while the other may struggle to make it to the next grade. Seeing a failing student with an ever-widening gap juxtaposed against the star student rouses a driving curiosity. How do we help each student achieve his or her potential? Little is known about the metacognition and executive function skills needed for academic achievement among children with hearing loss. Moreover, few recognize that these students must expend significantly more effort and allocate more cognitive resources trying to achieve what may come more naturally to their peers without hearing loss. This lack of knowledge stems from a combination of factors. First, there is minimal research because hearing impairment is a low-incidence condition, and existing studies are limited in sample size and Closing the Achievement Gap for Children With Hearing Loss Audiologists and SLPs can work as agents of change to ensure students with hearing loss achieve critical academic milestones. BY LORI A. PAKULSKI Once a child has an identified hearing loss, that child needs auditory access that makes every decibel count.